English - Our Nature is Divine - AudioBook

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Audiobooks
7
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Description

Expressing nature.

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Young Adult (18-35)

Accents

Indian (General)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
our real nature is divine. Here is a beautiful figure. Picture the cells to be writer and this body the chariot, the intellect to be the chariot er mind the rains and the senses The horses He whose horses are well broken and who's rains are strong and kept well in the hands of the chariot. Er the intellect reaches the goal, which is the state of him, the Omni present, but the man whose horses, the census are not controlled nor the rains. The mind well managed, goes to destruction. This at man in all beings does not manifest himself to the eyes or the census. But those whose minds have become purified and refined realise him beyond all sound. All sight beyond form, absolute beyond all taste and touch, infinite without beginning and without end, even beyond nature, the unchangeable. He who realises him frees himself from the jaws of death. But it is very difficult. It is, as it were, walking on the edge of a razor. The way is long and perilous, but struggle on. Do not despair awake, arise and stop. Not till the goal is reached. The one central idea throughout all the open shots is that of realisation, since enjoyments please many they seek for them. But there may be others whom they do not please who want higher enjoyment. The dog's pleasure is only in eating and drinking. The dog cannot understand the pleasures of the scientist who gives up everything and perhaps dwells on the top of a mountain to observe the position of certain stars. The dogs may smile at him and think he is a madman. Perhaps this poor scientists never had money enough to marry even and lives very simple.